UpFRONT

Matt Chapman's web pages at
http://www.plig.org/xwinman/are devoted to Window Managers and
offer the browser a chance to vote for his favorite. Here are the results as of June 22.

ET PHONE TUX

What kind of computers are doing the most listening for extraterrestrial intelligence when they're not busy
grinding cycles on earthbound work? The first answer is obvious. The second isn't (unless you're one of us, of
course). The following graph shows the stats from
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/as of the most recent
summer solstice.

Thinkful Wishing

No-partition Windows-based Linux Installs: Seems like everybody's trying to take
the fun out of installing Linux. They want to make it easy. They want to give away the ending and spare us the
story. They want to make the hacker's OS as hack-free as possible.

Well, maybe they have a point. And if they do, why not go one better? Why not make Linux installable on any
Windows box as it stands? Click on your download file and install the sucker right there, from Windows,
without partitioning the hard drive.

Sound crazy? Not to Cameron Cooper and Keith Broere, the founders of Phat Linux. These guys have figured out
a way to load a full Linux distribution from inside Windows. When it's over, you've got a two-OS box.

The punchline? This isn't new to either of these guys. They've been on the case since they were both 14 years
old—last year. Next fall they'll be sophomores in high school. But not the same high school. In fact, not even the
same country. Cameron lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Keith lives in Sandusky, Ohio (“near the amusement park”).
Two guys, two countries, one cool new distribution. Check it out at
http://www.phatlinux.com/.

Internet Floppies Revisited: No sooner thought than done. Right on the heels of
last month's Internet Floppy idea, the guys at FreeDiskSpace.com have mounted a set of sites that works for all the
major platforms, including Linux.

Want extra disk storage—a place to store up to 25MB of files you can pull down from any browser anywhere?
Check out
http://www.FreeLinuxSpace.com/. Signup is a breeze.

The next step is to make this a value-add for ISPs and anybody else with the space and a way to make money
with it. But wait a minute. They do that, too, with an affiliates program, banners and sponsors for the folders in
your FreeLinuxSpace directory.

Now, how long will we have to wait for file I/O over the Net? Another whole month?

—Bruce Fryer

Earth-shaking Harbingers

It was kind of amusing, really, fielding brickbats from testosterone-pumped twenty-somethings for whom money
and Microsoft's survival are so central that they have trouble grokking that anyone can truly think outside that
box. On some subjects their brains just shut down—the style reminded me a lot of the anonymous cowards on
Slashdot.

At PC Forum in 1997, Jim Barksdale, then the President and CEO of Netscape, said he got the idea for opening
his company's browser source code from “this guy Raymond”, and identified the originator of Linux as “Linus
Pauling”. He wasn't too far off, because Linus Torvalds' parents actually named their boy after the famous
American Nobel prize winner and vitamin C wacko.

And there began the tale of two pronunciations that have done nothing but permute. There is not only no
consensus on how to pronounce Linux, but this condition appears to derive from an equal uncertainty about how to
pronounce Linus. The Web is full of sound files in which Linus says, “Hi, my name is Leenoos Torvahlds and I
pronounce Leenooks as Leenooks.” More or less. That's Jim Choi's phoneticization of the recording.

But let's face it: that's not complicated enough. Since there is only a one-letter difference between Linus
and Linux, we thought we'd see how well the two mapped across the Web by searching for the coincidence of Linus and
Linux with various phonetic spellings of the same. As you can see, the results are equally absorbing and
inconclusive, providing plenty of grist for the disagreement mill.

Oh, by the way, Lin-ux appears to be the winner, with 72 pages showing this pronunciation.

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